6533b86efe1ef96bd12ccafc

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Molecular phylogeny of hyperoliid treefrogs: biogeographic origin of Malagasy and Seychellean taxa and re-analysis of familial paraphyly

Joachim KosuchFrank GlawWolfgang BöhmeMiguel VencesMichael Veith

subject

ParaphylySubfamilybiologyHyperoliidaeZoologyHeterixalusbiology.organism_classificationMonophylySister groupMolecular phylogeneticsGeneticsAnimal Science and ZoologyLeptopelisMolecular BiologyEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematics

description

Treefrogs of the family Hyperoliidae are distributed in Africa, Madagascar and the Seychelles. In this study, their phylogeny was studied using sequences of fragments of the mitochondrial 16Sand 12SrRNA and cytochrome b genes. The molecular data strongly confirmed monophyly of the subfamily Hyperoliinae but indicated that the genus Leptopelis (subfamily Leptopelinae) is more closely related to species of the African family Astylosternidae. The Seychellean genus Tachycnemis was the sister group of the Malagasy Heterixalus in all molecular analyses; this clade was deeply nested within the Hyperoliinae. A re-evaluation of the morphological data did not contradict the sister group relationships of these two genera. The subfamily Tachycneminae is therefore considered as junior synonym of the Hyperoliinae. In addition, the molecular analysis did not reveal justification for a subfamily Kassininae. Biogeographically, the origin of Malagasy hyperoliids may not be well explained by Mesozoic vicariance in the context of Gondwana breakup, as indicated by the low differentiation of Malagasy hyperoliids to their African and Seychellean relatives and by analysis of current distribution patterns.

https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1439-0469.2003.00205.x